ORPA Denies CIA Aid

Cerigua Weekly Briefs, no.11, 11 March 1997

Guatemala City, March 11. Ex-guerrilla leaders deny allegations
published in the U.S. press that the CIA supplied one of their factions
with arms in the early 1980s.

According to sources cited in the March 9 Miami Herald story, in 1982
the CIA air-dropped assault rifles, grenades, grenade launchers and
sophisticated communications equipment over territory controlled by the
Revolutionary Organization of the People in Arms (ORPA).

The CIA made the arms transfer to encourage renegade Sandinista
guerrilla Eden Pastora to join the counter-revolutionary army the
agency was setting up to overthrow Nicaragua's left-wing government,
the source says. Pastora, whom the Herald called an advisor to ORPA,
reportedly asked for the arms shipment as a show of good faith.

But ORPA denies receiving weapons from the U.S. agency. "The sources
from which we obtained arms were always independent. We never had any
connection with the CIA," former ORPA Field Commander Santiago told
Cerigua.

The Guatemalan army also denies knowledge of the case. "The news
surprises me and shows that the CIA are bastards (malditos)," former
Guatemalan Defense Minister Gen. Hector Gramajo Morales told the daily
Prensa Libre.

Other rebel leaders speculate the information is an attempt to create
division among the four organizations that make up the Guatemalan
National Revolutionary Unity (URNG). "It's part of a campaign to
discredit a URNG member organization that could never have established
links with the CIA," said ex-guerrilla Commander Pablo Monsanto.